NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — It was two years ago the city set out to sell off municipal property that's not needed or really never wanted.
But the city's attempts to divest itself of unwanted properties has not so far been terribly successful. Some smaller lots have been auctioned off or sold to abuttors, but the larger parcels seem to be in real estate limbo.
Only one appears headed toward a resolution soon: the former City Yard that is under contract with Cumberland Farms. The convenience store and gas station chain has requested extensions but has also moved ahead to line up permits and approvals to build a large new location on the Ashland Street property.
Still, Mayor Thomas Bernard is hoping the Mohawk Theater will solicit enough interest to get it off the city's books.
"Even if the result is not viable at least we can't say then that nobody has done anything," he said in an interview a few weeks ago.
The theater on Main Street is arguably the "jewel in the crown" of the properties the administration is trying to get into hands that can develop and rejuvenate them. It's important enough that the City Council on Tuesday voted to continue discussion before authorizing the mayor to proceed.
Of the others, the potential buyer for the Windsor Mill has dropped out after the latest test findings at the former textile factory. The salt shed on Ashland Street and Notre Dame church have purchase-and-sales agreements and no bids have been received for Sullivan School.
Simeon Bruner of Cambridge Development Corp., and principal of Bruner/Cott Architects, had offered $465,000 for the historic Windsor Print Works mill, assessed at $1.1 million, with the pledge to invest a minimum of $400,000 on facade and capital improvements within the next three years. That was back in July 2017.
Former Mayor Richard Alcombright, who'd pushed to divest the city of unused properties, had advocated for the developer, pointing to Bruner's work at Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art and other similar mill-repurposing projects.
The city was working to get the sale through early in the new year but Bruner called the deal off last week.
Bernard said his office had been in contact with the developer in trying to set a timeline. Environmental testing was being done at the mill but Bernard said on Tuesday he had not fully reviewed the results. The developer, he said, had determined it wasn't worth or didn't want to deal with clean up of the property.
Councilors were somewhat irritated that they were not kept in the loop on the deal and City Councilor Benjamin Lamb on Tuesday asked for a formal reporting structure and access to studies done on the property.
"It's disappointing we get these from the media," Lamb said. The failed purchase was first reported Monday in The Berkshire Eagle.
The New York group that purchased Dowlin Block and Porter & Tower Building had also offered $500,000 for the mill with similar plans.
The city purchased the mill in 1976 for $163,625 with hopes to develop an arts and crafts center and a number of artisans along with light manufacturing do operate in the mill. The former Windsor Print Works closed in 1956.
It was one of several properties taken over by past mayors to prevent their deterioration. Bernard described them as being "held in trust" until viable operators could be found. The Mohawk is one such trust item.
The city has owned the theater since 1993 but has been unable to cover the burgeoning cost of restoration work or settle on a use for the long-vacant structure. Bernard is hoping another entity -- private or nonprofit -- will be able to revive the landmark moviehouse and Main Street's fortunes with it.
The parcel consists of three lots on just under a half acre; the front of the building where the lobby was, the theater space and a paved parking area in the rear. Together, all three pieces are valued at $446,400.
At least two or more entities have evinced interest in the theater. Museum maestro Thomas Krens, who considers it part of his North Adams cultural project, brought along some of his Hollywood friends to look it over a few years ago and a local group has been brainstorming ideas for the 80-year-old theater's resurrection.
Another "trust" property, a wary City Council authorized the purchase of the closed church in 2007, largely as a way to preserve the church's steeple. A purchase-and-sale agreement was approved for $253,000 but the deal has not closed. Notre Dame Church closed in 2005 and is assessed at $605,000 total.
"The last conversation I had with the folks doing Notre Dame is they are moving forward with their stuff," Bernard said. "Everybody is moving forward deliberately."
The mayor was confident that the sale of the old City Yard would happen and the salt shed as well.
"The City Yard is moving forward, they've extended option one more time but they've also come before the Planning Board and the City Council for all the things they need to do," he said of Cumberland Farms. "So I see that project as going forward."
Cumberland Farms in October 2017 offered $575,000 for the Ashland Street property, $100,000 more than the appraisal. That price includes an agreement for the city to share up to half the purchase price in cleanup costs. The company almost two weeks ago filed its special permits with the Northern Berkshire Registry of Deeds and the Ashland Street property is on the demolition list going before the Historical Commission on Thursday.
The Department of Public Works moved out the older complex and into the former anodizing plant the city purchased at Hodges Cross Road.
B&B Micro Manufacturing put in a winning bid for the city's old salt shed at $75,000 but has not closed on the property. Bernard said that had worked somewhat in the city's favor because the salt shed is still being used.
"The timing on it gets us through the winter because if they had closed faster, we would have had to do some kind of lease-back agreement or share," he said.
As for the vacant Sullivan School on Kemp Avenue, which has elicited no responses, Bernard said it's worth putting out RFPs once a year or more "until somebody sees the potential and ... if it's a credible bid, let them deal with it."
"I can appreciate from a development perspective how difficult it would be to make that compliant," he said of the hillside structure and its four levels. "It's built on a weird level."
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North Adams Schools Hike Substitute Wages to Increase Pool
By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The public schools are hoping to recruit and retain substitute teachers by bumping up their pay.
The School Committee earlier this month approved increasing the pay scale by $35 to $55 a day and creating a new base of $130 for substitutes with fewer credentials.
"It's been very hard to get substitutes. Many substitutes sign up to sub in multiple districts, and so in order to remain competitive ... we really needed to kind of align our expectations for substitutes, as well as the salary with our neighboring districts," said Superintendent Barbara Malkas.
Nancy Rauscher, director of school finance and operations, said she had contacted business administrators at other schools to work out what they were paying substitutes.
"I did a blend, and it was Lenox, Mount Greylock and Hoosac Valley, and we're landing somewhere right in the middle," she said. "Mount Greylock is at the highest and then Lenox and Hoosac Valley are lower."
Mount Greylock is paying $210 for a certified/retired teacher, Hoosac $140 and Lenox $150, with less for just a college degree. North Adams has been paying a straight $115 per diem and $130 for permanent daily subs.
The new scale increases the per diem and permanent to $150 with college degree or $170 for certified/retired teachers.
The School Committee earlier this month approved upping the pay scale by $35 to $55 a day and creating a new base of $130 for substitutes with fewer credentials.
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